Friday 30 October 2009

Round Table Christmas Float.

Last week I picked up the Round Table Christmas Float. Hopefully this weekend I will get the opportunity to clean it up for a very special person who will be joining us on our charity collections in the lead up to Christmas.
The float in all its glory.

Tuesday 27 October 2009

Time to improve.

My business is continuing to be impacted upon by the Padarn Lake algae outbreak which has meant I have decided to re-evaluate the cleaning products used in the centre and the damage they have on the environment I work in. In my business environmental statement I say that although I do not always get it right first time, as I am educated I will make improvements as I can. As a result I have found an important area in which to make changes.
The new cleaning product range for Boulder Adventures
In an effort to reduce my output of harmful cleaning agents I am now trialling different cleaning products from ECOVER and ECOLEAF. I have also found that although these products seem more expensive, with reasonable planning; bulk buying, reusing containers and monitoring the amounts used to ensure correct dilution for the job, prices can be relatively comparable; it just takes a bit more effort. In thinking through my practices I have found that I should reduce the road miles for products to the centre because I can buy in bulk and reduce my waste by reusing the dispensing containers, in theory one step better than recycling.

Friday 23 October 2009

Wedding Pictures.

As I mentioned in a previous post, last weekend I visited the Isle of Man for my brother, George and Jens’ wedding. It was a fabulous weekend for all involved. Some of my pictures follow.
George and Jen leaving the church. George and Jen as husband and wife. The best man, Big Phil. The Crombie family, with the new addition! Michael no doubt recounting his youth once more.

Tuesday 20 October 2009

Snowdon makes it into the news ....... again.

Normally stories like the ones below make it round the village of Llanberis quite quickly, seemingly there is something making the news from the mountain every week. It often seems to be charity walking groups making the headlines for the wrong reasons causing as much trouble as the good they planned to do. This is often because they lack any significant mountain experience or leadership and more often than not, in my experience of working with these groups, being very poorly equipped.

This weekend I was not at home in the village to hear any stories first hand but read them in the Sunday Telegraph on the ferry from the Isle of Man on the way home from my brother’s wedding, Pictures and details of the wedding to follow shortly.

Charity climb team member left behind.

Wednesday 7 October 2009

New advice from the Environment Agency.

In June of this year the EA and Gwynedd Council gave warning that Llyn Padarn had high levels of toxic blue/green algae. This is naturally occurring but never, as far as I have known, been present in dangerous levels in Llyn Padarn. As the algae presented a health risk to people and animals I decided that it would be unacceptable for me to make the decision to expose my customers to this risk. From June onwards I have not used LLyn Padarn for any of my kayaking, canoeing or raft building activities. This is despite having a centre directly on the shores of the lake. As I write, this now totals four months of increased hassle and cost of running my business with no immediate end in sight.

What now wrangles is that the environment agency is now recommending that people should be switching to more ecologically sound detergents to help limit the level of nutrients making it through the water system into the lake. This education in its own right is commendable but costs me more in my operating costs. Surely it is also an admission that the sewage treatment works for Llanberis cannot cope with current demand, although Welsh Water claim this not to be the case. A report compiled in June by the EA noted it was likely that improvements to the Llanberis treatment works would be needed to ensure that the lake meet the requirements of the EC Water Framework Directive. Why on earth are we now trying to sort out a problem like this when the lake is apparently monitored so regularly? The EA advice could have been given earlier or Welsh Water should have ensured their treatment works was capable of dealing with increased levels of nutrients.

Hopefully Llanberis can lower its output of phosphates and nutrients to a point where they are manageable by the manmade and natural water systems that have to deal with them. If not, the worst case scenario may be that another hot summer may produce the same results. So far the algal blooms must have affected most outdoor centres and providers in North West Snowdonia. Three of these have a centre on the shores of Llyn Padarn with many more no more than fifteen minutes drive away. The blooms have also had a major impact of the fisheries of the Seiont River meaning two significant tourism industries have been restricted in operating when the recession is causing additional demands already.
Surely now that it is apparent that the local council, Welsh Water, the Environment Agency and the Welsh Assembly all know about this very serious problem, it is time for all involved to take responsibility for this environmental disaster and cure the problem causing it.